"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

August 1, 2009
CHATTANOOGA,
Tenn.—It seems hard to believe, but 20 years have passed since The
Honors Course first played host to the Tennessee Amateur.
Since that time, says no less an expert than
former Tennessee Golf Association executive director Dick Horton,
the grand old tournament has thrived, hosted by the state’s finest
courses, which, following the lead of The Honors, have helped
create an impressive rotation of venues both historic (Memphis
Country Club, Chattanooga Golf and Country Club, Belle Meade
Country Club) and modern (Golf Club of Tennessee, The Virginian,
Black Creek).
“When The Honors accepted our tournament back
in 1989, it almost immediately changed the whole landscape,”
Horton recalls. “It had been becoming increasingly difficult to
get certain clubs in the state to agree to host the tournament for
five days. But The Honors invitation changed all that around. If
the Amateur was good enough for The Honors, it was good enough for
several of our other top courses.”
On the occasion of the third Tennessee
Amateur to be played at The Honors on Aug. 4-7, it’s an
appropriate time to look back at the first two tournaments played
there and catch up with the players who won them.
1989—Rextar outlasts the field
As long as he lives, East Tennessee State
golf coach Fred Warren won’t forget Yasunobu “Rex” Kuramoto. When
Warren was hired away from Mike Holder’s staff at Oklahoma State
in 1986 to revive a dormant ETSU program that had been
inexplicably shut down three years earlier, the first player he
signed was Kuramoto, a red-shirt freshman who was the 12th
man at OSU and in no danger of making the traveling squad in the
foreseeable future.
Holder approached Warren about taking
Kuramoto with him to Johnson City, but Kuramoto was reluctant at
first.
“His first thought was he wanted to stay
there,” Warren said. “But he thought about it some more. He
eventually left a great program to come to a place where there was
no program, so he had of faith in me. I’ve always appreciated
that.”
The transfer worked well for Kuramoto—whose
teammates dubbed him “Rex” because of his fondness for the old
Rextar golf balls—and for ETSU. He earned honorable mention
All-America honors in 1989 and 1990 and was the 1990 Southern
Conference Player of the Year. And ETSU regained its prominence in
the SoCon and nationally. Kuramoto was a pioneer recruit for
Warren.
As the 1989 Tennessee Amateur approached,
Kuramoto knew he wanted to play, but there was some question as to
whether he would be eligible.
“It was a relatively controversial decision,”
Horton said. “Fred Warren had gotten out ahead of the curve and
asked if Rex would be eligible to play. We had always resisted
calling college kids residents. But Rex met all the criteria—he
had an apartment in Johnson City, was handicapped by [the TGA],
had a Tennessee driver’s license. It was a very close vote by our
board of directors, but what ended up swaying the decision was Rex
[was eligible] to play in the U.S. Amateur.”
The Honors Course was a brutal host that
week.
“In 1989, we used the [Tennessee Amateur] as
a dry run for the U.S. Amateur [which The Honors hosted in 1991],”
said David Stone, the only greens superintendent the course has
ever had. “And so we wanted them to play it tough and pretty far
back.”
The greens were extremely difficult, but they
weren’t as fast as some people remember.
“I don’t think most of the players were used
to playing greens that firm and fast,” Stone said. “People tell me
they were the fastest greens they ever putted on, but the numbers
don’t bear that out. But they were very firm.
“It was difficult if you missed a green, too.
Back then, we had bluegrass rough around the greens, including
right off the end. In the summertime, that stuff would get thin
and you’d get poor lies.”
After two rounds, not many people were
thinking about Kuramoto’s chances to win. He shot a 2-over-par 74
in the first round and trailed leader Pat Corey of Chattanooga by
five shots. Corey fell off the leaderboard after a second-round
80, to be replaced by Jimmy Johnston, then playing for Georgia
Tech, whose 74-72—146 was one stroke ahead of David Apperson and
six in front of Kuramoto.
The third round was particularly brutal; of
the top five players on the leaderboard, three of them—Johnston,
Apperson and Corey—shot 77. Only Kuramoto’s ETSU teammate Chris
Dibble, who led with a 54-hole total of 222, mastered the course
in round three. He shot 70 and led by a shot over Johnston, whose
9 on the par-4 15th left him shaking his head over what
might have been.
Kuramoto’s shot 73 and was at 225 for the
tournament, three shots back.
In the final round, Dibble dropped out fairly
quickly after taking a triple-bogey 7 at No. 7. He would shoot 83
and finish in seventh place. Middle Tennessee State golfer Jeff
Cook, who played high school golf at Chattanooga Notre Dame, found
himself leading the pack on the back nine after Kuramoto took a
triple-bogey at 15.
Kuramoto bounced back with an up-and-down par
at the tricky par-3 16th, but still trailed Cook by a
shot.
The stroke that ultimately won the tournament
for Kuramoto was a 25-foot birdie putt on the par-5 17th
that broke right to left about 10 feet. When he sank the putt,
Kuramoto and Cook were tied.
After Cook skied his tee shot at 18, leading
to a double-bogey, the tournament belonged to Kuramoto. He fed off
his victory for a long time to come.
“Winning the state title gave me so much
confidence,” Kuramoto said. “I won the Southern Conference the
next year and the Japan Amateur.
“The [Honors] played so difficult. But I was
surprised at how beautiful it was. And the conditioning was
perfect. It’s the best course I have ever played.”
After college, Kuramoto played the European
Tour and the Japan Tour. These days, he works for the Golf
Channel, where he covers the European Tour and translates English
commentary into Japanese.
“Working at the Golf Channel is quite an
experience,” said Kuramoto, who ran into Warren, his old college
coach, at the British Open at Turnberry last month. “It’s still
nice to introduce myself as the Tennessee Amateur champion.”
1999—Long-hitting Nelson conquers the
field
Chattanooga’s D.J. Nelson had long been known
for his prodigious length off the tee, but it wasn’t until his
senior year playing for the University of South Alabama that he
realized he could really play.
“It was about halfway through my senior
season,” Nelson recalls. “I realized I had a lot of shots other
people don’t have, and that it was just a matter of hitting them
when I really needed to.”
Nelson spent his college career searching for
a validating big win that could give him momentum for a shot at
pro golf, and he finally claimed it in the 1999 Tennessee Amateur.
The Honors was a course perfectly suited for his game and a place
with which he was very familiar.
“Growing up out at Creeks Bend [golf club],
we used to be able to play The Honors in the junior match play
championship at the end of the year. That was the goal, to get to
play The Honors for two or three days. When you pulled through the
gates, you just felt you were some place special.”
Just like it did in 1989, the Amateur
championship resembled a college tournament. On the final day,
Nelson, Georgia All-American Michael Morrison, yet another
Chattanoogan, and Tennessee’s Andy Brimer all had their chances to
win, along with Trey Lewis of Hendersonville.
Playing in the second to last group, Nelson
birdied the first two holes to get to 4-under for the tournament.
But Morrison did the same and stood at 5-under. The par-3 third
hole proved tricky for both players; each bogeyed. But while
Nelson was able to recover with birdies at No. 7 and 8, Morrison
made double-bogey at No. 9. He turned in 38, to 33 for Nelson, who
led at 5-under.
On the back nine, Nelson, Morrison, Brimer
and Lewis all had their chances. But as it does in every
tournament it hosts, The Honors extracted a heavy toll on two of
the contenders. Brimer and Lewis both double-bogeyed the par-4 15th,
setting the stage for the two Chattanoogans to battle for the
championship.
Nelson won the tournament at 15. Trying to
steer clear of the water that guards the left side of the hole,
Nelson pushed his drive right, into the trees. He had to pitch out
sideways and was left with a 175-yard shot. He calmly knocked it
to six feet and drained his par putt, and he closed out his round
with three more pars.
Morrison had a 20-foot birdie at No. 18 to
tie, but when it fell short, Nelson had won the most significant
tournament of his career. He was the first Chattanoogan to win the
state amateur since Gibby Gilbert III at Bluegrass Yacht and
Country Club in 1988.
Nelson (285) and Morrison (286) were the only
two players to finish under par.
Nelson would turn pro after the Amateur, with
mixed results. He won $100,000 for out-driving John Daly in a
contest sponsored by Pinnacle golf balls, and he came within two
strokes of making it to the final round of the PGA Tour’s rugged Q
school.
“I started going through some swing issues
after that,” Nelson said. “I went through a period of six months
where I couldn’t break 80. It went from going really good to
really bad. It was three years before I could break par again.”
By that time, Nelson had given up on a
playing career, but when former South Alabama teammate Heath
Slocum offered a job as his caddy, Nelson had finally found his
way to the PGA Tour. He’s been on Slocum’s bag for eight years,
and the experience has been life changing. Nelson looks back
fondly on the night in 2003 when tour player Chad Campbell’s wife
set him up on a blind date.
“Actually, she set up me and Chad’s caddy
with dates,” Nelson says, laughing. “And we both wound up getting
married. She should open up a business.”
Nelson eventually moved with wife Lori to
Fort Worth, Texas, where six months ago, they added baby Kinley to
the family. Now that he’s married with children, life on the road
isn’t quite as appealing to Nelson.
“It’s been a great gig,” Nelson said. “Heath
is an unbelievable ball striker and we’ve done well. But it’s
tough traveling with a wife and kid at home.”
Nelson plays just for fun these days, but
says maturity has helped make him a better golfer. And time has
helped him appreciate his victory in the 1999 Tennessee Amateur
even more than he did 10 years ago. The Honors, which he hasn’t
played since winning the amateur, will always be special to
Nelson.
“To this day, even on the great courses I’ve
caddied on like Augusta, I’ve never been on a course I like more
than The Honors,” Nelson said. “I tell that to tour players all
the time. And if they’re lucky enough to get to play the course,
they will see what I mean.”
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